Special Representative Farid Zarif. UN Photo/Rick Bajornas
KOSOVO HAS MADE ‘REMARKABLE’
PROGRESS, PRISTINA-BELGRADE DIALOGUE MUST CONTINUE – UN OFFICIAL
10 February 2014 – Building on the “remarkable
progress” made in Kosovo during 2013, particularly with regard to local
elections, both parties must consolidate “the critical achievements”; Pristina
and Belgrade must continue their dialogue to reach regional reconciliation,
stability and prosperity, the top United Nations official there said today.
“It will be essential for Belgrade and
Pristina to consolidate the historic progress achieved thus far, and to
overcome, gradually but steadily, the many outstanding issues through
dialogue,” UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s Special Representative, Farid
Zarif, told the Security Council.
Mr. Zarif, who was presenting Mr. Ban’s
latest report to the 15-member body, heads the UN Interim Administration
Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK), set up in 1999 to run Kosovo after North-Atlantic
Treaty Organization (NATO) forces drove out Yugoslav troops amid deadly
fighting with the majority ethnic Albanian population there. Kosovo declared
independence from Serbia in February 2008, but Serbia does not recognize the
declaration.
In April 2013, Pristina and Belgrade reached
a European Union (EU)-facilitated Agreement of Principles Governing the
Normalization of Relations, leading in November to largely peaceful mayoral and
municipal assembly elections that for the first time included four largely Serb
northern Kosovo municipalities under a single legislative framework, although
the post-poll establishment of the new administrations there moved at a slow
pace.
“An essential basis for this progress has
been an increased level of mutual confidence and direct communication between
the parties, which has been sustained regardless of the disagreements and
disputes over the details of implementation,” Mr. Zarif said.
He noted also that nearly 150 Serbian police
officers have completed their induction and transition to the Kosovo police,
with another 100 officers completing the process and assuming duties in the
North by the end of this week.
But work still remained to be done regarding
the judiciary in northern Kosovo despite some progress. “Flexibility should be
demonstrated by both sides on such future arrangements as [this] would ensure
maximum access to justice and promote broad public confidence in the system,”
he stressed.
“Building greater confidence in the police
and judiciary throughout Kosovo is of the highest importance, especially as
implementation proceeds in northern Kosovo,” where, he said, the recent killing
of a newly-elected member of the North Mitrovica municipal assembly remains
unsolved.
“Indeed, the deep prevailing concerns among
the local public in the north, over the implications of the ongoing political
transitions on their daily lives, should be met by determined efforts to
achieve visible progress in improving local infrastructure and delivery of
public services, and ensuring reliable and responsive law enforcement.”
In his report Mr. Ban praises the “strong
leadership and commitment” of Belgrade and Pristina that culminated in the
April agreement and stresses the importance of continuing the dialogue.
“The substantial progress achieved in the
transition of the police structures in northern Kosovo should be matched by
early progress on the related issue of the judiciary and other rule of law
areas,” he writes. “I again call upon all sides to exercise maximum flexibility
and show mutual accommodation in their approach to further implementation.”
He calls on the international community to
continue to encourage and actively support the dialogue process by assisting
the newly elected local municipal assemblies and leaders, including in northern
Kosovo, to demonstrate the peace dividend through the early progress of their
constituencies.
“It is essential to ensure that the future
benefits for all involved municipalities, south and north of the Ibër/Ibar
River (a geographical divide between ethnic Serbs and ethnic Albanians), are
accrued through well-coordinated local and international efforts,” he says.
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